COVERT WRITERS TAKEDOWN by Joe Bergeron (best ebook reader for chromebook TXT) š
- Author: Joe Bergeron
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got to have the remaining partners.ā
He drew, and released, a deep breath.
āWhy would she and her partners want to keep
something so valuable away from their country?
Santiago wants support, so I donāt think sheās involved
with him. We canāt guess at Belizeās position until
Robert gets us more data, but Iād guess he was Pro-
American also.ā 186
She followed, but questioned.
Why do you say that?ā
āBecause Santiago wouldnāt keep him around if
he wasnāt.ā
āWhat if President Santiago didnāt know
everything his Vice President was doing?ā
āLike what?ā
āI donāt know, but I donāt think you can make
that assumption right now.ā
āOKā¦what if weā¦ā
Gerry Allison had appeared, right index finger
raised.
āThanks Gerry.ā
He hit the speaker button.
āThis is Michael Courtney.ā
āListen up, philosopher. I have your
instructions. Do you have a pad and pen to write this
down?ā
āSure.ā
āWe want stories across the country by all
three hundred writers to articulate different messages,
but everyone will write negatively regarding the Cuban
Economic Reform Plan. In all your eastern newspapers,
wherever a state touches the Atlantic, your writers will
composite the negative effects of the money supply, and
the decrease in new building permits. Through
Minnesota, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Pennsylvania, Texas, and Tennessee, theyāll play off the
lack of orders for new plants and equipment, and fasts
vendor deliveries. In the rest of your papers, theyāll
work with lower prices for sensitive materials, and the
low trading volumes currently on the New York Stock
Exchange and NASDAQ. Are you with me so far?ā
āI have it.ā
āWe want each of your writers to place twelve
stories in the next ninety days. Remember, we have the
list, and weāll be looking for the bylines. Thatās all for
now. Get your people mobilized, and make sure they
understand. 187
Iāll get you your release dates, the first one will
be next week. Then youāll hear from me again as we
move along.ā
āThatās it? Thatās all you want? Do you know
what the hell youāre asking? You want me to
compromise this whole organization for your benefit.
You want me to tell all my people to produce stories
they know I would never ask them to write. How the
hell do you suggest I go about this.ā
āUse the Economic Indicators I just gave you,
Courtney. I keep getting told youāre the bright one.ā
āYouāre looking for bylines as early as next
week. I need some time to put this together.ā
āWell, then get your ass in gear. Iāll call you
again.ā
The phone clicked, and hummed
āSeems like heās got it now, doesnāt it, Michael?ā
āYeah, and heās also got a friend telling him
weāre smart.ā
He made a mental note.
āBreacherās friend.ā
āAre you going to do what heās asking?ā
āYes, weāll follow his plan, but our own way..ā
Tuesday, May 23, 2:05 p.m.
The printouts were generated through an
access code system that had reached into the data bases
at The Central Intelligence Agency. It was an allowed
breach available to the organization that neither
Michael Courtney nor Andy St. Croix new the whole
truth about.
Robert Wirtham, sitting behind a pile of
computer paper, began his debriefing for Courtney.
āBelize is a holdover from the old government,
Michael. He was a Senior Government Official with no
tight title. Castro kept him as an advisor on all sorts of
projects, but mostly financial initiatives.
188
Heās a Harvard alumnus, very bright, degreed in
economics and finance. He never officially joined the
Communist Party, but he was a loyal troop to the Old
Man. Santiago picked him for the number two spot
because he needed a transitional figure from the old
government with a flair for Economics. Itās Belize whoās
doing all the negotiating with our Secretary of
Commerce regarding the American Corps and their
presence on the island.ā
JGMās President turned a page.
āBelize also holds the purse strings of Cuba
acting as Chief of The Treasury, and can flip millions
around with the stroke of a pen. Santiago seems to
have a lot of faith in his judgment, although he hasnāt
signed any big checks yet. OK, thatās him.ā
Another page was turned.
Catalina Salazar is Belizeās Administrative
Assistant. She came out of Havanaās slums and got an
education for herself at The University of Miami. She
has a B.S. in Accounting, and an MBA in Finance. She
returned to the island to work in the government
despite the fact that she had offers from corps like
Prudential-Bache, and Arthur Anderson. Belize took
her under his wing, and sheās been working for him ever
since.
Another page was turned.
Dan Bellcamp is a Laws Candidate out of
Arizona State. Heās a prolific writer with great
communication skills, which helped him become M.E of
THE MIAMI HERALD at the age of thirty-six. Heās
been known to be a pain in the butt, and he can be
obstinate as hell, but heās a smart man that knows how
to put words together to move people. Right now, no
one has a clue as to where he is, and because he doesnāt
have any relatives that miss him, thereās no public
officials out looking for him.ā
Wirtham looked up from his stack of pages.
189
ā Andyās brought back enough data to convince
me that Bellcampās tied up in the breach with Belize
and Salazar. Thereās no apparent power struggle
between Belize and Santiago. We know from people
inside THE HERALD that Bellcamp was working on a
story with both Salazar and Belize, so that while it
might have appeared coincidental that he be associated
with their names, the two goons Andy met at Bellcampās
house negated that. One of them gave Andy Belizeās
name rather than face the unfriendly side of Mister St.
Croix.ā
He returned to his pages.
Tom Griffinās only been with us a short time,
but heās a good writer, and he has great potential. The
kidās always on time with his writes, and expresses our
point of view very dramatically through every TAC.
Another page was turned.
āGeorge Tollman is a Harvard MBA, and a
former President of Beechman Aircraft. He lives well,
and heās a good deal maker. While he hasnāt stopped
American corps from becoming involved in Cuba, heās
also not a champion of the idea. He thinks we need to
evaluate our capital and labor resources, and our needs
at home before we invest in the island.ā
Wirtham looked up with concluding remarks.
āHe also cites a renewed Russian threat, or a
possible Sino/Soviet return to Cuba, but that argument
is losing its validity daily.ā
Wirtham released his hands from the
computer-generated workouts.
His face serious, his attention and eye direction
turned to the woman sitting beside his former student.
He addressed her.
āKathleen, George Tollman was also your brother Johnās
Company Commander in Vietnam. Iām only putting
that on the table because itās a fact, but I think it might
be something worth reviewing.ā
190
She carried a photo of him - not the marine, not
the soldier - but the brother; the older brother she never
knew, never touched, never spoke to, but always loved.
She didnāt need to respond.
Wirtham concluded.
āLet me know what your next step is Michael.
Andy is putting some tactical data together he wants
me to review - Iāll brief you later.ā
He turned to face her.
āAre you alright?ā
āIām fine, just feeling very sensitive about my
brother, John, and the fact that George Tollman was his
Commanding Officer. Iād like to go to the library and do
some work on that. Will you come with me?ā
āOf course. I need to talk to Robert about some
time sequences. Just give me a few minutes with him.ā
āOK.ā
She seemed both lost and found.
When sheād left the room, he returned to
Wirtham.
āWhereād we get all that information on these
people?ā
āWhat do you mean? Off our system.ā
āI knew we had the economic stuff, but I didnāt
think we could get that detailed on people.ā
āWe cross reference with some government
computers.ā
āWhose?ā
Wirtham got up, not wanting to continue the
conversation.
āItās simple, theyāre just data banks available to
anyone. Arenāt you going with Kay?ā
Courtneyās intuition told him an impropriety
had just been commissioned by his former professor.
Something wasnāt right.
He mentally filed the moment.
āOK, I was just wondering.ā
Wirtham didnāt look at him as he left the room.
191
He also knew it wouldnāt be long before his
student got to the truth.
Tuesday, May 23, 5:15 p.m.
The District of Columbia library and its
attending branches house over two million bound
volumes of literature.
None of these volumes was of any consequence
to them this afternoon.
What was more important was the newspaper
microfilm files stored in the cavernous vaults of D.C.ās
cultural residence.
Prior, in an earlier time, sheād reviewed with
Robert, the time sequences, Asian geography, and
combat unit designations pertinent to her brotherās
case. She knew them by heart.
She and Courtney sat side by side reviewing
newspaper pages photographically engraved on silver
halides.
In one chronological series of stories, sheād
counted over sixty newspapers carrying accounts of the
āMassacre at La Dang,ā and had read through sixteen of
those accounts.
Kathleen McKenzie was a fast researcher, and
a good mental detective. In a little over two hours sheād
found several sensational descriptions of the cause of
the events.
Beneath each photo of the La Dang atrocity
was something even trained observers might overlook
because of its commonality to every photo reproduced in
a newspaper - the photographic credit.
In every shot she reviewed, there was only one
credit.
āPhoto Courtesy of CBS NEWS, Inc.ā
Courtney, reviewing the same photos, hadnāt
missed the credit either, and, in fact, had noted it
several times.
192
āMichael, How many photos have you seen.ā
He made a quick mental calculation.
āTwelve or so.ā
āAll the oneās Iāve seen have the same credit,
CBS NEWSā
āLet me check my notes.ā
Flipping through six pages, he numbered his
writings.
āI have fourteen - all CBS NEWS. What are
you thinking?ā
āIām thinking that CBS would probably still
have the film or videotape, and Iād like to see it.
āAre you sure you want to do that, Kay?ā
āYesā¦I am. Tell me what you got out of this.ā
āThereās not one shred of evidence in
everything Iāve read that could tie John to the events of
that day - everything is conjecture. In all the articles,
thereās very few mentions of Tollman. He never
defended John - didnāt even bother to give an account of
what type of marine he was, or wasnāt. He just threw
his hands up in the air and chalked it all up to the
consequences of war.ā
He squared his body to hers.
āHow the hell can somebody be that undefined
about something like this? Consider this too. How can
a guy who becomes President of a major aircraft
manufacturing company, who takes that company from
a medium sized corporation to become one of the
industry giants, act so wobbly about the Cuban
initiatives, and act just as wobbly as a Marine Corps
Commander? You donāt become what Tollman became
by being indecisive. Heās bright, Kay, he has a Harvard
MBA. Everything he did after John died, and
everything heās doing now just donāt fit the profile of
who he really has to be to have become what heās
become.ā
193
He touched her gently on the arm.
āCome on. Letās go back to the hotel and call
Eddie Dalger. If anyone knows someone at CBS, it will
be him.ā
After making several photo copies, they left.
Tuesday, May 23, 7:16 p.m.
āHello, Ellen - this is Kathleen McKenzie. Iām
sorry to bother you, but may I please speak with Eddie?
āHold on, Kathleen, he just
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